Kellyanne Conway should learn that pieces of paper on TV invites memes

White House senior counselor Kellyanne Conway made a grave, amateur mistake Wednesday night when she appeared on Fox News holding up to sheets of white paper. The internet had a field day doctoring a still from that interview to alter what the print on the paper said.

Desperate to convince the American people that the collusion narrative is merely a liberal fantasy, Conway turned to props to help get her point across. The spin doctor held up two white sheets of paper with the words “conclusion,” “collusion,” “illusion” and “delusion.”

.@KellyannePolls: “What’s the conclusion? Collusion? No, we don’t have that yet.” #Hannity pic.twitter.com/hWLQ9WPpc3

— Fox News (@FoxNews) July 13, 2017

“This is to help all the people at home,” Conway told Fox News host Sean Hannity.

“What’s the conclusion? Collusion? No. We don’t have that yet. I see illusion and delusion,” she explained.

While Hannity chuckled at Conway’s ingenuity, Twitter could not stop laughing when users began to photoshop the image to make it seem as if she was trying to say something else.

I think Kellyanne Conway is trying to tell us something. pic.twitter.com/u4ydrOdFcz

This was not the first instance when the internet hilariously trolled a white sheet held up by a member of the Trump administration. One online generator allows people to create their own executive order showed off by President Donald Trump himself.

Donald Trump has signed an executive order to suppress your vote. Learn about Trump’s Electoral Commission here: https://t.co/i0uvtFIx90 pic.twitter.com/wpZaDvLb2N

— Young People For (@YP4) July 12, 2017

Besides the all the meme opportunities Conway provided social media, one other noteworthy scoop came out of the “Hannity” interview. When Conway said that there was no collusion, she qualified that statement with “yet.”

“We don’t have that yet,” she said.

Perhaps the White House adviser is aware of more damning reports that may soon leak to the press.

Taylor Link is an assistant editor at Salon. You can find him on Twitter at @taylorlink_